Before FreeBSD may be installed on the target system, it is necessary to build the minimal FreeBSD operating system image which will boot from the hard drive. This way the new system can be accessed from the network, and the rest of the installation can be done without remote access to the system console.
The mfsBSD tool-set can be used
to build a tiny FreeBSD image. As the name of
mfsBSD suggests (“mfs”
means “memory file system”), the resulting image
runs entirely from a ramdisk. Thanks to this feature, the
manipulation of hard drives will not be limited, therefore it
will be possible to install a complete FreeBSD operating system.
The mfsBSD home page
includes pointers to the latest release of the toolset.
Please note that the internals of mfsBSD and how it all fits together is beyond the scope of this article. The interested reader should consult the original documentation of mfsBSD for more details.
Download and extract the latest mfsBSD release and change your working directory to the directory where the mfsBSD scripts will reside:
#
fetch http://mfsbsd.vx.sk/release/mfsbsd-
2.1
.tar.gz#
tar xvzf mfsbsd-
2.1
.tar.gz#
cd mfsbsd-
2.1
/
Before booting mfsBSD, a few important configuration options have to be set. The most important that we have to get right is, naturally, the network setup. The most suitable method to configure networking options depends on whether we know beforehand the type of the network interface we will use, and the network interface driver to be loaded for our hardware. We will see how mfsBSD can be configured in either case.
Another important thing to set is the root
password. This can be
done by editing conf/loader.conf
. Please
see the included comments.
When the installed network interface card is unknown, it
is possible to use the auto-detection features of
mfsBSD. The startup scripts of
mfsBSD can detect the correct
driver to use, based on the MAC address of the interface, if
we set the following options in
conf/interfaces.conf
:
mac_interfaces="ext1" ifconfig_ext1_mac="00:00:00:00:00:00" ifconfig_ext1="inet 192.168.0.2/24"
Do not forget to add the
defaultrouter
information to
conf/rc.conf
:
defaultrouter="192.168.0.1"
When the network interface driver is known, it is more
convenient to use conf/rc.conf
for
networking options. The syntax of this file is the same as
the one used in the standard rc.conf(5) file of
FreeBSD.
For example, if you know that a re(4) network
interface is going to be available, you can set the
following options in
conf/rc.conf
:
defaultrouter="192.168.0.1" ifconfig_re0="inet 192.168.0.2/24"
The process of building an mfsBSD image is pretty straightforward.
The first step is to mount the FreeBSD installation
CD, or the installation
ISO image to /cdrom
.
For the sake of example, in this article we will assume that
you have downloaded the FreeBSD 10.1-RELEASE
ISO. Mounting this ISO image to the
/cdrom
directory is easy with the
mdconfig(8) utility:
#
mdconfig -a -t vnode -u 10 -f
FreeBSD-10.1-RELEASE-amd64-disc1.iso
#
mount_cd9660 /dev/md10 /cdrom
Since the recent FreeBSD releases do not contain regular distribution sets, it is required to extract the FreeBSD distribution files from the distribution archives located on the ISO image:
#
mkdir
DIST
#
tar -xvf /cdrom/usr/freebsd-dist/base.txz -C
DIST
#
tar -xvf /cdrom/usr/freebsd-dist/kernel.txz -C
DIST
Next, build the bootable mfsBSD image:
#
make BASE=
DIST
The above make
has to be run from the
top level of the mfsBSD directory
tree, for example
~/mfsbsd-2.1/
.
Now that the mfsBSD image is ready, it must be uploaded to the remote system running a live rescue system or pre-installed Linux® distribution. The most suitable tool for this task is scp:
#
scp disk.img [email protected]:.
To boot mfsBSD image properly,
it must be placed on the first (bootable) device of the given
machine. This may be accomplished using this example
providing that sda
is the first bootable
disk device:
#
dd if=/root/disk.img of=/dev/sda bs=1m
If all went well, the image should now be in the
MBR of the first device and the machine can
be rebooted. Watch for the machine to boot up properly with
the ping(8) tool. Once it has came back on-line, it
should be possible to access it over ssh(1) as user
root
with the
configured password.
All FreeBSD documents are available for download at http://ftp.FreeBSD.org/pub/FreeBSD/doc/
Questions that are not answered by the
documentation may be
sent to <[email protected]>.
Send questions about this document to <[email protected]>.